Why on Earth would you hide out on top of a Walmart? It's too vulnerable up there: if the police don't get you, the cows definitely will. Break into a Home Depot instead. You'll have all the materials you'll need to build a bridge to the afore mentioned Chick-Fil-A. Heck, break into one of those, now that I think of it....You know, if you soak 3 pearls in the ocean for 3 days and dance around them in your boxers to Kenny Loggin's Footloose, they'll sprout into a turtle-katana that can slice through anything and weight virtually nothing whilst retaining the elasticity of your average turtle.Just sayin'.

So you DID make an I'dible on it! I don't know why I couldn't find this for so long. Good to see another one of your Instructables, Rebekah. Anywho, this build was awesome. How comfortable is the handle? I would have figured it would be slightly hard to keep the blade-alignment on whatever you're hitting, just looking at the weight and the wrist support.Nice build, I'm enjoying your editing on your videos a lot more, btw, particularly when you were attacked in your shop ;)But be careful out there, my friend..........It's cow season.

Thanks a lot, I'm sorry I didn't find your comment for so long. I guess Instructables didn't notify me. You're Horus Inlay came out looking very clean too, by the way. There's plenty of humor in your own tutorials as well ;)

Hehe, this instructable reminded me of the great toad invasion of 2011: baby toads everywhere. And I mean everywhere.

Agreed. Cheers from the West!

Here on our property, unfortunately. I think it was 2011, at least. I remember stuffing my coat pockets full of little toads, hoping to take them to our 'habitat'. Here's hoping there won't be a Great Hangliding Cow invasion of 2018 ;)

As far as I can tell from your PowerPoint presentation and my own research, that'd work fine. Sheesh, who knew that a simple punching bag could have so many uses? Maybe I could churn butter in this thing as well...Thanks for your intriguing comment :)

As far as I can tell, the weeds inside don't do anything except settle. The more you strike the bag, the more they settle, which means you can keep filling it periodically. And, obviously, they get torn up a bit.Interestingly, the grass hasn't dried out, the bag mostly keeps the moisture, so they haven't yellowed. So...to answer your question...I've no idea. What're you filling it with, exactly?

Dang, that'd be the best coffee table ever. You could use a warhammer or mace as a table leg...I dunno how, but it'd be awesome. Fantastic build, my dear somewhat-obsessed-with-building-weapons friend!

Pizzaz! Yes, it took a while, breathing down your neck, but hey, it came out nicely.Next time we make a deadly weapon, we should take pictures of the stuff we destroy with it. Because we're into that sort of thing.But now you've got me worried...can I top this?

These projects just seemed to good to pass up. I built a rocket out of a friend's fallen birch trees, and used screws and some wood glue to hold it all together. I actually used chisels to bore the holes in the wood, so I could spend more time outside, building this. Thanks for posting this amazing guide.

I've always wanted to work with bones, the way the ancients did. I'll likely make this some time in my current existence, but I'll likely use it for hunting those darn hangliding cows I'm so terrified of.

I've been planning to make something from earthware clay, but I'm afraid I've been caught up in other projects, most of which include delaying hangliding cows from world destruction. I'm sure I'll get back to those porjects soon enough, hopefully....